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BIBLIOGRAPHY1

THE UNITED STATES

ADDITON, HENRIETTA S. 1. The Sphere of the Policewoman. National W. C. T. U. Publishing House, Evanston, Illinois. Per copy, 2 cents; per 50, 35 cents; per 100, 60 cents. 2. Functions of Policewomen. Reprinted from Journal of Social Hygiene, June, 1924. The American Social Hygiene Association, 370 Seventh Avenue, New York City. Single copies, 10 cents. 3. The Policewoman. Proceedings of the National Probation Association, 1924. BEVERIDGE, EDNA A. Establishing Policewomen in Maryland in 1912. Proceedings National Conference of Charities and Correction, 1915. BINFORD, JESSIE F. Community Protective Social Measures. Proceedings National Conference of Social Work, 1924.

BLIX, O. B. The Policewoman Movement (1921) Municipal Reference Library, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

BOWEN, LOUISE DE KOVEN. 1. The Policewoman's Job. What it is and what it should be. Bulletin Women's City Club of Chicago, October, 1921. 2. Policewoman's Job. Toledo City Journal, February 11, 1922.

BRANDENBURGHER, JOHN A. Effective Work of Policewomen. American City, March, 1922.

BRUERE, H. Police as Welfare Workers. American City, March, 1914. BURNSIDE, CLARA. International Association of Policewomen,

Providence (R. I.) Meeting, 1922. The Survey, July 15, 1922. CORNING, E. L. Women Police Service, 1714 Lane Street, Topeka, Kansas. Pamphlet, 25 cents.

DARWIN, MAUDE. Policewomen-Their Work in America. Nineteenth Century, June, 1914, page 1370.

Davis, KATHARINE BEMENT. 1. How the Public May Help. Proceedings National Conference of Social Work, 1920. 2. The Policewoman. Woman Citizen, May 30, 1924.

1 This bibliography is designed to be a guide to those wishing to consult sources. Many short magazine and newspaper articles are not included.

DRISCOLL, MARY E. Women's Place in the Police Plan. Policeman's
News, November-December, 1920.

FOSDICK, RAYMOND B. 1. American Police Systems, New York:
Century Co., 1920. Bureau of Social Hygiene, 370 Seventh
Avenue, New York City. $2.00. 2. European Police Systems,
New York: Century Company, 1916. Bureau of Social Hygiene,
370 Seventh Avenue, New York City. $2.00.
FULD, LEONARD FELIX. Police Administration, New York. G. P.
Putnam's Sons, 1909. (Edition exhausted. Consult Public
Library.)

HALL, SOPHIA. Municipal Police Women. 1922 Information Report
No. 22-Municipal Information Bureau, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, Wisconsin.

HAMILTON, MARY E. 1. Women's Place in the Police Department. The Independent Woman, April 21, 276 Seventh Avenue, New York City. 10 cents. 2. Why We Need Policewomen. National Police Bulletin, October 31, 1921. 240 Centre Street, New York City. 3. Why Policewomen Are Needed. Police Journal, July, 1922. 4. Policewomen and Their Work. Police Journal, September, 1922. 5. The Policewoman: Her Service and Ideals. F. A. Stokes, New York City, 1924. Price, $1.50.

HARRIS, MARY B., PH.D. The Socialized Policewoman. The Woman Citizen, June 27, 1925.

HUTZEL, ELEONORE L. The Work of a Policewoman. Proceedings, American Prison Association, 1922.

KOELKER, E. S. Policewomen. The Municipality (League of Wisconsin Municipalities), Madison, Wisconsin, February, 1916. LANE, W. D. Girls and Khaki. The Survey, December 1, 1917. MADDEN, LILLIAN. The Modern Policewoman's Work. Police Journal, April, 1924.

MARSHALL, SABINA. Development of the Policewoman's Movement in Cleveland, Ohio. Journal of Social Hygiene, April, 1925. MASON, BLANCHE H. Women's Protective Division, Seattle Police Department. Civil Service Age, May, 1918. 449 New York Building, Seattle, Washington. Price, 10 cents.

MINER, MAUDE E. 1. The Girl Problem in War Time. Proceedings, National Conference of Social Work, 1918. 2. Policewomen and the Girl Problem. Proceedings National Conference of Social Work, 1919. 3. A Community Program for Protective Work. Proceedings National Conference of Social Work, 1920.

MINER, STELLA A. Protecting Girls in War Time. Proceedings New York City Conference of Charities and Corrections, 1918.

MITCHELL, HANNAH. The Lady Cop-She Fills a Need and is Here to Stay. Woman Citizen, May 21, 1921.

MURRAY, VIRGINIA N. Policewomen in Detroit. American City, 1921.

NICHOLS, MARIAN C. Policewoman Movement in Massachusetts, Bulletin Massachusetts Society for Social Hygiene, April, 1920. NILES, ALFRED S. The Police Department and the Social Problem. Proceedings National Conference of Charities and Corrections, 1915. O'GRADY, ELLEN S. Policewomen and Their Work. American Citizen, 1919.

OWINGS, CHLOE. Women Police. Journal of Social Hygiene, 370 Seventh Avenue, New York City, January, 1925. Reprint, 10 cents per copy.

PARKER, VALERIA H. A Policewoman's Life. Woman Citizen, June 28, 1924.

PULLMAN, R. W. Police and Public Health. Journal of Social Hygiene, July, 1919.

RIPPIN, JANE DEETER. 1. Specific Problems in Camp Communities. Proceedings National Conference of Social Work, 1918. 2. Outline of Organization and Methods. Section on Women and Girls -War Department Commission on Training-camp Activities. ROGERS, H. B. Policewomen Here to Stay. Police Journal, October, 1923.

ROOD, HENRY. Policewomen and Their Work. The Delineator, March, 1916.

SAWYER, R. Policewomen for University Towns. Woman Citizen, March 22, 1924.

SMITH, A. W. Colored Policewomen of Washington. Southern Workmen, March, 1922.

SMITH, CLARENCE B., JR. The True Sphere of Policewomen. Police Journal, April, 1922.

SMITH, J. W. Enter the Lady Cop of Gotham. Boston Evening Transcript, May 18, 1918.

TAUSSIG, EDITH. The Attack on the Women's Bureau. The Voice of the People, April 22, 1922.

VANDYKE, IRENE. No Man's Land in Police Work. What Women's Precincts Are Doing to Solve the Runaway-girl Problem. The Forecast, August, 1921.

VAN WINKLE, MINA C. 1. What is a Policewoman? National W. C. T. U. Publishing House, Evanston, Illinois. Per copy, 2 cents; per 50, 35 cents; per 100, 60 cents. 2. Work of the Woman's Bureau of the Metropolitan Police Department, Washington, D. C. Proceedings American Prison Association, 1919. 3. Standardization of the Aims and Methods of the Work of Police women. Proceedings National Conference of Social Work, 1920. 4. Municipal Policewomen: Their Duties and Opportunities, American City, 1921. 5. Policewomen Do Not Find Themselves in Ruts. The Globe, New York City, April 15, 1921. 6. Women Police Officers and General Social Work. Policeman's News, July, 1921. 7. Purpose and Scope of a Woman's Bureau. Police Journal, November, 1922, 8. The Policewoman. Proceedings National

Conference of Social Work, 1924. 9. The Policewoman. The Survey.
September 15, 1924. 10. Socializing the Police. Woman Citizen
June 13, 1925.

WELLS, MRS. A. S. 1. Need for Policewomen in City Work. Chicago
City Club Bulletin, October 31, 1912. 2. Women on the Police
Force. American City, April, 1913. 3. Women Police Officers.
The Vigilance Record, June, 1913. 4. Need for Policewomen.
Proceedings National Conference of Charities and Corrections,
1915. 5. The Policewoman Movement, Present Status and Future
Needs. Proceedings National Conference of Charities and Correc-
tions, 1916.

WALBROOK, H. M. Women Police and Their Work. Nineteenth Century, February, 1919.

WHITE, I. PARLEY. The Work of Policewomen in Salt Lake City. American Citizen, June, 1917.

WOODS, ARTHUR W. 1. Crime Prevention. Princeton University Press, 1918. Price, $1.00. Princeton, New Jersey. 2. Policeman and Public. New Haven, Connecticut. Yale University Press, 1919. Price, $1.50.

REPORTS, PUBLICATIONS AND SOME UNSIGNED ARTICLES APPEARING IN PERIODICALS AND NOT LISTED ABOVE

American City (The), 443 Fourth Avenue, New York City. 1. Municipal Policewomen-Their Duties and Appointments, April, 1917. 2. The Duties of a City Mother, Los Angeles, California, March,

1922.

Dayton Municipal Review. Efficiency and Effectiveness of Policewomen, March, 1921.

Detroit Community Fund News, 316 Jefferson Avenue, S., Detroit, Michigan, August 16, 1925.-Police women as Social Workers. International Association of Policewomen, Evening Star Building, Washington, D. C. 1. The Policewoman Movement. Present Status and Future Needs. Alice Stebbins Wells. 2. President's Letter June 22, 1916. 3. President's Letter-Year 1918-1919. 4. Proceedings, 1916, Annual Meeting. 5. Tentative Digest of the Work of Policewoman, 1920. 6. Bulletins 1 to 10, 1924 and 1925.

Journal of Social Hygiene, 370 Seventh Avenue, New York City, February, 1924. Program of vocational training for directors of policewomen's units.

Literary Digest. 1. Policewomen in Chicago, August 23, 1913. 2. What Police Read, June 13, 1914. 3. Indianapolis and Their New Methods, April 23, 1921. 4. Mothers of Disillusioned Girls in New York City, March 15, 1924.

Manual for the various agents of the Interdepartment Social Hygiene Bureau, Washington, Government Printing Office, 1920.

Municipal Journal, 243 West 39th Street, New York City, February 1, 1919. Capital to Have Thirty Policewomen.

National Police Magazine. 1. Work of Lola Baldwin, Portland, Oregon, April, 1913.

New York Police Department, 240 Centre Street, New York City. 1. Annual Reports, 1918, 1919, 1920, 1921, 1922, 1923. 2. Duties of Police Matrons. Municipal Year Book of the City of New York, 1916.

New York State Bureau of Municipal Information. Women on the Police Force of Cities, 1916. Information Report No. 88.

Outlook. Police as Social Workers, December 16, 1914.

Police Journal. 1. International Association of Policewomen Meets in Milwaukee, June, 1921. 2. In the Policewomen's Sphere, April 25, 1921. 3. Women's Protective Division of Portland, Oregon, February, 1920.

Policeman's News. 1. Wants Policewomen in Every Large City, April, 1917. 2. The Question of the Policewoman, December, 1918. 3. Organizing a Bureau of Policewomen, October, 1920. Report on the Work in Military Camps in the United States. War Department-Commission on Training Camp Activities, Washington, D. C.

Survey (The). 1. To Make Social Workers of Policemen, June, 1914. 2. Policewoman of the Future, January 17, 1914. 3. Women Police in England, September 1, 1917. 4. A Policewoman on Trial, April 15, 1922. 5. To Make Social Workers of Policemen, June 13, 1924.

Toledo City Journal (The). The Indianapolis Policewomen, November 27, 1920.

U. S. Bureau of Census, Washington, Government Printing Office. General Statistics of Cities, 1915. Policewomen. Page 18.

U. S. War Department. Annual Report, 1918. Page 13. Trainingcamp Activities.

Washington, D. C. 1. Police Department Manual, 1923. 2. Annual Reports Since 1915. 3. Investigation of Salaries of Metropolitan Police Members. Hearings-H. R. 7983. Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, 1919. Washington, Government Printing Office. 4. Women's Bureau, Police Department, District of Columbia. Joint Hearing on S. 4308, February 20, 1925. Washington, Government Printing Office, 1925.

Women Citizen (The). 1. Women Police, December 29, 1917. 2. When Mothers Are Policewomen, March 9, 1918. 3. Woman's Police Bureau, September 6, 1919. 4. North Carolina Policewoman, May 5, 1923.

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